Monday, April 25, 2011

The Civil War - A film by Ken Burns

I am a huge Ken Burns fan. It's funny, when you watch a Ken Burns documentary, you think yep, this is exactly the way a documentary should be.   But then you realize no one made documentaries quite like this until he came along.  We all know it when we see it, that now-famous Ken Burns style: 1) telling a story from the perspective of a range of characters (from presidents to housekeepers) that we'll follow through the whole unfolding drama, 2) a 3rd person narration throughout the film with voice actors filling in quotations from characters in the story, 3) photographs depicting scenes from the subject matter that are zoomed in on and panned to mimic a moving image and provide better context, and 4) a musical soundtrack with a mix of era-specific tunes and modern-day originals to highlight story events.

Of course, these are the technical details of the Ken Burns style that wouldn't matter much if Ken Burn's story telling skills were not on the same level.   Luckily, Burns is up to the task.  He can take on a topic as focused as Lewis and Clark's expedition or as broad as Baseball or our National Parks, and tie together a compelling narrative that he can hold together for a 10-part, 10-hour miniseries, just as easily as an hour-long episode.

So I had seen just about every Burns documentary, except for his first and maybe his most famous, The Civil War.  Recently I started reading Gore Vidal's book Lincoln and decided I could watch the Civil War documentary sort of simultaneously (recently getting Netflix streaming on my blu-ray player also helped).  So I'm watching it, and it's awesome.  And you might think that 11 hours is a little more time than you'd like to spend watching a documentary.  But I find it's just like the WWII drama Band of Brothers. Once you finish the last episode, 10 hours in, you are easily ready for 10 hours more.

Below is the trailer for the series.  And just because I can... below that is Bob Dylan's video for "Cross the Green Mountain," which is a great song (shortened for the video) from the perspective of a confederate soldier from the soundtrack for the film Gods and Generals.  Dylan loves to play dress-up.


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